2019/09/07

Peace education - Wikipedia

Peace education - Wikipedia





Peace education

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Peace education is the process of acquiring the values, the knowledge and developing the attitudes, skills, and behaviors to live in harmony with oneself, with others, and with the natural environment.
There are numerous United Nations declarations on the importance of peace Information Age Publishing. ISBN 978-1-59311-889-1Chapter details; and Page, James S. (2008) 'Chapter 9: The United Nations and Peace Education'. In: Monisha Bajaj (ed.)Encyclopedia of Peace Education. (75-83). Charlotte: Information Age Publishing. ISBN 978-1-59311-898-3Further information</ref> Ban Ki Moon, U.N. Secretary General, has dedicated the International Day of Peace 2013 to peace education in an effort to refocus minds and financing on the preeminence of peace education as the means to bring about a culture of peace.[1][2] Koichiro Matsuura, the immediate past Director-General of UNESCO, has written of peace education as being of "fundamental importance to the mission of UNESCO and the United Nations".[3] Peace education as a right is something which is now increasingly emphasized by peace researchers such as Betty Reardon[4] and Douglas Roche.[5] There has also been a recent meshing of peace education and human rights education.[6]

Definition[edit]

Ian Harris and John Synott have described peace education as a series of "teaching encounters" that draw from people:[7]
  • their desire for peace,
  • nonviolent alternatives for managing conflict, and
  • skills for critical analysis of structural arrangements that produce and legitimize injustice and inequality.
James Page suggests peace education be thought of as "encouraging a commitment to peace as a settled disposition and enhancing the confidence of the individual as an individual agent of peace; as informing the student on the consequences of war and social injustice; as informing the student on the value of peaceful and just social structures and working to uphold or develop such social structures; as encouraging the student to love the world and to imagine a peaceful future; and as caring for the student and encouraging the student to care for others".[8]
Often the theory or philosophy of peace education has been assumed and not articulated. Johan Galtung suggested in 1975 that no theory for peace education existed and that there was clearly an urgent need for such theory.[9] More recently there have been attempts to establish such a theory. Joachim James Calleja has suggested that a philosophical basis for peace education might be located in the Kantian notion of duty.[10]James Page has suggested that a rationale for peace education might be located in virtue ethics, consequentialist ethics, conservative political ethics, aesthetic ethics and the ethics of care.[11] Robert L. Holmes claim that a moral presumption against violence already exists amongst civilized nations. On the basis of this presumptive prohibition, he outlines several philosophical values which are relevant to the nonviolent resolution of conflicts between nations on the international level including pacifism.[12] [13]
Since the early decades of the 20th century, "peace education" programs around the world have represented a spectrum of focal themes, including anti-nuclearism, international understanding, environmental responsibility, communication skills, nonviolence, conflict resolution techniques, democracy, human rights awareness, tolerance of diversity, coexistence and gender equality, among others.[14]

Forms[edit]

Conflict resolution training[edit]

Peace education programs centered on conflict resolution typically focus on the social-behavioural symptoms of conflict, training individuals to resolve inter-personal disputes through techniques of negotiation and (peer) mediation. Learning to manage anger, "fight fair" and improve communication through skills such as listening, turn-taking, identifying needs, and separating facts from emotions, constitute the main elements of these programs. Participants are also encouraged to take responsibility for their actions and to brainstorm together on compromises[15]
In general, approaches of this type aim to "alter beliefs, attitudes, and behaviours...from negative to positive attitudes toward conflict as a basis for preventing violence" (Van Slyck, Stern and Elbedour, 1999, emphasis added).[16] There are various styles or approaches in conflict resolution training (ADRVerbal AikidoNVC) that can give the practitioner the means to accept the conflictual situation and orient it towards a peaceful resolution. As one peer mediation coordinator put it: "Conflict is very natural and normal, but you can't go through your entire life beating everybody up—you have to learn different ways to resolve conflict".[17]

Democracy education[edit]

Peace education programs centered on democracy education typically focus on the political processes associated with conflict, and postulate that with an increase in democratic participation the likelihood of societies resolving conflict through violence and war decreases. At the same time, "a democratic society needs the commitment of citizens who accept the inevitability of conflict as well as the necessity for tolerance" (U.S. Department of State, The Culture of Democracy, emphasis added).[18] Thus programs of this kind attempt to foster a conflict-positive orientation in the community by training students to view conflict as a platform for creativity and growth.[citation needed]
Approaches of this type train participants in the skills of critical thinking, debate and coalition-building, and promote the values of freedom of speech, individuality, tolerance of diversity, compromise and conscientious objection. Their aim is to produce "responsible citizens" who will hold their governments accountable to the standards of peace, primarily through adversarial processes. Activities are structured to have students "assume the role of the citizen that chooses, makes decisions, takes positions, argues positions and respects the opinions of others":[19] skills that a multi-party democracy are based upon. Based on the assumption that democracy decreases the likelihood of violence and war, it is assumed that these are the same skills necessary for creating a culture of peace.

Human rights education[edit]

Peace education programs centered on raising awareness of human rights typically focus at the level of policies that humanity ought to adopt in order to move closer to a peaceful global community. The aim is to engender a commitment among participants to a vision of structural peace in which all individual members of the human race can exercise their personal freedoms and be legally protected from violence, oppression and indignity.[citation needed]
Approaches of this type familiarize participants with the international covenants and declarations of the United Nations system; train students to recognize violations of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights; and promote tolerance, solidarity, autonomy and self-affirmation at the individual and collective levels.[20]
Human rights education "faces continual elaboration, a significant theory-practice gap and frequent challenge as to its validity".[21] In one practitioner's view:
"Human rights education does not work in communities fraught with conflict unless it is part of a comprehensive approach... In fact, such education can be counterproductive and lead to greater conflict if people become aware of rights which are not realized. In this respect, human rights education can increase the potential for conflict"[22]
To prevent these outcomes, many such programs are now being combined with aspects of conflict resolution and democracy education schools of thought, along with training in nonviolent action.[23]

Worldview transformation[edit]

Some approaches to peace education start from insights gleaned from psychology which recognize the developmental nature of human psychosocial dispositions. Essentially, while conflict-promoting attitudes and behaviours are characteristic of earlier phases of human development, unity-promoting attitudes and behaviours emerge in later phases of healthy development. H.B. Danesh (2002a, 2002b, 2004, 2005, 2007, 2008a, 2008b)[24] proposes an "Integrative Theory of Peace" in which peace is understood as a psychosocial, political, moral and spiritual reality. Peace education, he says, must focus on the healthy development and maturation of human consciousness through assisting people to examine and transform their worldviews. Worldviews are defined as the subconscious lens (acquired through cultural, family, historical, religious and societal influences) through which people perceive four key issues: 1) the nature of reality, 2) human nature, 3) the purpose of existence, 4) the principles governing appropriate human relationships. Surveying a mass of material, Danesh argues that the majority of people and societies in the world hold conflict-based worldviews, which express themselves in conflicted intrapersonal, interpersonal, intergroup, and international relationships. He subdivides conflict-based worldviews into two main categories which he correlates to phases of human development: the Survival-Based Worldview and the Identity-Based Worldview. It is through the acquisition of a more integrative, Unity-Based Worldview that human capacity to mitigate conflict, create unity in the context of diversity, and establish sustainable cultures of peace, is increased—be it in the home, at school, at work, or in the international community.

Critical peace education[edit]

Modern forms of peace education relate to new scholarly explorations and applications of techniques used in peace education internationally, in plural communities and with individuals. Critical Peace Education (Bajaj 2008, 2015; Bajaj & Hantzopoulos 2016; Trifonas & Wright 2013) is an emancipatory pursuit that seeks to link education to the goals and foci of social justice disrupting inequality through critical pedagogy (Freire 2003). Critical peace education addresses the critique that peace education is imperial and impository mimicking the 'interventionism' of Western peacebuilding by foregrounding local practices and narratives into peace education (Salomon 2004; MacGinty & Richmond 2007; Golding 2017). The project of critical peace education includes conceiving of education as a space of transformation where students and teachers become change agents that recognise past and present experiences of inequity and bias and where schools become strategic sites for fostering emancipatory change.[25][26][27][28][29][30][31]

Yogic peace education[edit]

Where Critical Peace Education is emancipatory, seeking to foster full humanity in society for everyone, yogic peace education (Standish & Joyce 2017)[32] is concerned with transforming personal (as opposed to interpersonal, structural or societal/cultural) violence. In yogic peace education, techniques from yogic science are utilized to alter the physical, mental and spiritual instrument of humanity (the self) to address violence that comes from within. Contemporary peace education (similar to all peace education) relate to specific forms of violence (and their transformation) and similar to teaching human rights and conflict resolution in schools critical peace education and yogic peace education are complementary curricula that seek to foster positive peace and decrease violence in society.

Criticism[edit]

Toh Swee-Hin (1997) observes that each of the various streams of peace education "inevitably have their own dynamics and 'autonomy' in terms of theory and practice". "Salomon (2002) has described how the challenges, goals, and methods of peace education differ substantially between areas characterized by intractable conflict, interethnic tension, or relative tranquility".[33]
Salomon (2002) raises the problem and its consequences:
"Imagine that medical practitioners would not distinguish between invasive surgery to remove malignant tumors and surgery to correct one's vision. Imagine also that while surgeries are practiced, no research and no evaluation of their differential effectiveness accompany them. The field would be considered neither very serious nor very trustworthy. Luckily enough, such a state of affairs does not describe the field of medicine, but it comes pretty close to describing the field of peace education. First, too many profoundly different kinds of activities taking place in an exceedingly wide array of contexts are all lumped under the same category label of "peace education" as if they belong together. Second, for whatever reason, the field's scholarship in the form of theorizing, research and program evaluation badly lags behind practice… In the absence of clarity of what peace education really is, or how its different varieties relate to each other, it is unclear how experience with one variant of peace education in one region can usefully inform programs in another region."
According to Clarke-Habibi (2005), "A general or integrated theory of peace is needed: one that can holistically account for the intrapersonal, inter-personal, inter-group and international dynamics of peace, as well as its main principles and pre-requisites. An essential component of this integrated theory must also be the recognition that a culture of peace can only result from an authentic process of transformation, both individual and collective."[34]

See also[edit]

File:Tell Somebody by Alex Beroza & Admiral Bob.ogv

References[edit]

  1. ^ Peace Day 2013 Countdown
  2. ^ Other examples include:
  3. ^ Matsuura, Koichiro. (2008) 'Foreword'. In: J.S.Page Peace Education: Exploring Ethical and Philosophical Foundations. Charlotte: Information Age Publishing. p.xix.
  4. ^ Reardon, Betty. (1997). 'Human Rights as Education for Peace'. In: G.J. Andrepoulos and R.P. Claude (eds.) Human Rights Education for the Twenty-First Century. (255-261). Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
  5. ^ Roche, Douglas. (1993). The Human Right to Peace. Toronto: Novalis.
  6. ^ United Nations General Assembly. (1993) Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action (World Conference on Human Rights). New York: United Nations. (A/CONF. 157/23 on June 25, 1993). Part 2, Paragraphs 78-82.
  7. ^ Harris, Ian and Synott, John. (2002) 'Peace Education for a New Century' Social Alternatives 21(1):3-6
  8. ^ Page, James S. (2008) Peace Education: Exploring Ethical and Philosophical Foundations. Charlotte: Information Age Publishing. p. 189. ISBN 978-1-59311-889-1Chapter details
  9. ^ Galtung, Johan (1975) Essays in Peace Research, Volume 1. Copenhagen: Eljers. pp. 334-339.
  10. ^ Calleja, Joachim James (1991) 'A Kantian Epistemology of Education and Peace: An Examination of Concepts and Values'. Unpublishd PhD Thesis. Bradford University.
  11. ^ Page, James S. (2008) Peace Education: Exploring Ethical and Philosophical Foundations. Charlotte: Information Age Publishing. ISBN 978-1-59311-889-1Chapter details
  12. ^ Pacifism: A Philosophy of Nonviolence Robert L. Holmes. Book blurb on books.google.com
  13. ^ The Ethics of Nonviolence: Essay by Robert L. Holmes - Book blurb on google.books.com
  14. ^ See Groff, L., and Smoker, P. (1996). Creating global-local cultures of peace. Peace and Conflict Studies Journal, 3, (June); Harris, I.M. (1999). Types of peace education. In A. Raviv, L. Oppenheimer, and D. Bar-Tal (Eds.), How Children Understand War and Peace (pp. 299-317). San Francisco: Jossey- Bass Publishers; Johnson, M.L. (1998). Trends in peace education. ERIC Digest. ED417123; Swee-Hin Toh. 1997. “Education for Peace: Towards a Millennium of Well-Being”. Paper for the Working Document of the International Conference on Culture of Peace and Governance (Maputo, Mozambique, 1–4 September 1997)
  15. ^ See Deutsch, M. (1993). Educating for a peaceful world. American Psychologist, 48, 510-517; Hakvoort, I. and Oppenheimer, L. (1993). Children and adolescents' conceptions of peace, war, and strategies to attain peace: A Dutch case study. Journal of Peace Research, 30, 65-77; Harris, I.M. (1999). Types of peace education. In A. Raviv, L. Oppenheimer, and D. Bar-Tal (Eds.), How Children Understand War and Peace (pp. 299-317). San Francisco: Jossey-Bass Publishers.
  16. ^ Van Slyck, M.R., Stern, M., and Elbedour, S. (1999). Adolescents' beliefs about their conflict behaviour. In A. Raviv, L. Oppenheimer, and D. Bar-Tal (Eds.), How Children Understand War and Peace (pp. 208-230). San Francisco: Jossey-Bass Publishers.
  17. ^ Jeffries, R. Examining barriers to effective peace education reform. Contemporary Education, 71, 19-22.
  18. ^ U.S. Department of State Bureau of International Information Programs. (n.d.). The culture of democracy. Retrieved January 13, 2003, from http://usinfo.state.gov/products/pubs/whatsdem/whatdm6.htm
  19. ^ Quoted from CIVITAS BiH, a program of democracy and human rights education in primary, secondary and tertiary schools of Bosnia and Herzegovina.http://www.civitas.ba/nastavni_planovi/index.php
  20. ^ Brabeck, K. (2001). Justification for and implementation of peace education. Peace and Conflict: Journal of Peace Psychology, 7, 85-87.
  21. ^ Swee-Hin Toh. 1997. "Education for Peace: Towards a Millennium of Well-Being". Paper for the Working Document of the International Conference on Culture of Peace and Governance (Maputo, Mozambique, 1–4 September 1997)
  22. ^ Parlevliet, M. (n.d.). Quoted in Pitts, D. (2002). Human rights education in diverse, developing nations: A case in point – South Africa. Issues of Democracy, 7 (March). Retrieved January 12, 2003, from http://usinfo.state.gov/journals/itdhr/0302/ijde/pitts1.htm
  23. ^ Kevin Kester. 2008. Developing peace education programs: Beyond ethnocentrism and violence. Peace Prints, 1(1), 37-64.
  24. ^ Danesh, H. B. (2006). Towards an integrative theory of peace education. Journal of Peace Education, 3(1), 55–78.
    Danesh, H. B. (2007). Education for peace: The pedagogy of civilization. In Z. Beckerman & C. McGlynn (Eds.), Addressing ethnic conflict through peace education: International perspectives. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
    Danesh, H. B. (2008a). Creating a culture of healing in schools and communities: An integrative approach to prevention and amelioration of violence-induced conditions, Journal of Community Psychology.
    Danesh, H. B. (2008b). The education for peace integrated curriculum: Concepts, contents, effi cacy. Journal of Peace Education.
    Danesh, H. B., & Clarke-Habibi, S. (2007). Education for peace curriculum manual: A conceptual and practical guide. EFP-International Press.
    Danesh, H. B., & Danesh, R. P. (2002a). A consultative conflict resolution model: Beyond alternative dispute resolution. International Journal of Peace Studies, 7(2), 17–33.
    Danesh, H. B., & Danesh, R. P. (2002b). Has conflict resolution grown up? Toward a new model of decision making and conflict resolution. International Journal of Peace Studies, 7(1), 59–76.
    Danesh, H. B., & Danesh, R. P. (2004). Conflict-free conflict resolution (CFCR): Process and methodology. Peace and Conflict Studies, 11(2), 55–84.
  25. ^ Salomon, G. (2004). "Comment: what is peace education?" Journal of Peace Education, 1:1, 123-127.
  26. ^ Mac Ginty, R. & Richmond, O. (2007). "Myth or Reality: Opposing Views on the Liberal Peace and Post-War Reconstruction,", Global Society 21: 491-7
  27. ^ Golding, D. (2017). "Border Cosmopolitanism in Critical Peace Education,", Journal of Peace Education 14(2): 155-75
  28. ^ Bajaj, M. (2008). Encyclopedia of Peace Education. Charlotte: Information Age Publishing
  29. ^ Bajaj, M. (2015). 'Pedagogies of Resistance' and critical peace education praxis. Journal of Peace Education 12(2): 154-166.
  30. ^ Bajaj, M. & Hantzopooulos, M. (Eds) (2016). Introduction: Theory, Research, and Praxis of Peace Education in Peace Education: International Perspectives. New York: Bloomsbury (1-16).
  31. ^ Trifonas, P. P. & Wright, B. (2013). "Introduction," in Critical Peace Education: Difficult Dialogues. New York: Springer, (xiii-xx).
  32. ^ Standish, K. & Joyce, J (2017). (Forthcoming) Yogic Peace Education: Theory and Practice. Jefferson: McFarland and Company.
  33. ^ Salomon, G. (2002). "The Nature of Peace Education: Not All Programs Are Created Equal" in G. Salomon and B. Nevo (eds.) Peace education: The concept, principles and practices in the world. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum. Quoted in Nelson, Linden L. (2000). "Peace Education from a Psychological Perspective: Contributions of the Peace and Education Working Group of the American Psychological Association Div. 48."
  34. ^ Clarke-Habibi, Sara. (2005) "Transforming Worldviews: The Case of Education for Peace in Bosnia and Herzegovina". Journal of Transformative Education, Vol. 3 No. 1, pp. 33-56.

Further reading[edit]

External links[edit]

Nanjing, China – International Cities of Peace

Nanjing, China – International Cities of Peace



NANJING, CHINA: CITY OF PEACE


We welcome Liu Cheng and Zhang Jianjun who have with their colleagues and citizens established Nanjing, China as an International City of Peace. Mr. Liu Cheng is Professor for History, Director of Institute for Peace Studies, in School of History, Nanjing University. Mr. Zhang Jianjun is curator of the Memorial Hall of the Victims in Nanjing Massacre by Japanese Invaders, the executive director of Institute of Nanjing Massacre History & International Peace and the chief editor of the academic journal Japanese Invasion of China History Research, and popular journal on history Purple Grass.
Note: Introduction page with information primarily at the time of joining International Cities of Peace. For updates, please contact the liaison.

Nanjing University

NANJING INTRODUCTION
Nanjing is the ancient capital of the Six Dynasties in China. In 2016, the resident population of Nanjing was 8.27 million. It is in the forefront of China’s biggest cities in the fields of economy, education and urban construction and so on. Nanjing is a famous ancient capital with a thousand years of history, but it was also destroyed by the most brutal war in twentieth Century.
The Japanese massacre in Nanjing left the city with indelible memories. The peace brought about by the welfare of people and the disasters caused by war made Nanjing people more aware of the profound significance of peace.

THE ORGANIZATION OF PEACE
Institute for Peace Studies, Nanjing University
Nanjing University is the first university to conduct research of peace studies in China and it set up the first Institute for Peace Studies among all universities in China. Prof. Liu Cheng, the leading figure of peace studies in China, is the director of the institute. On March 1st 2017, UNESCO Chair on Peace Studies is set up in Nanjing University and it is the only chair on Peace Studies in China. The objective of the chair is to establish a comprehensive system including peace research, training, information exchange and literature compilation. It will promote cooperation between famous scholars and teaching staffs of universities and other institutions from China, Asian-Pacific region and other regions of the world. Prof. Liu Cheng is the Chair holder of UNESCO Chair on Peace Studies.
Institute of Nanjing Massacre History & International Peace
Institute of Nanjing Massacre History & International Peace was established on March 1, 2016, which is currently affiliated to the Memorial Hall of the Victims in Nanjing Massacre by Japanese Invaders. As one of the first high-level think tanks in Jiangsu Province, the Institute focuses on researches in the history of Nanjing Massacre, the history of Japanese invasion, the history of Anti-Japanese War, the history of Sino-Japanese relations and peace studies. Besides, the Institute focuses on collecting, studying and assessing cutting-edge and dynamic information and making corresponding responses, thus it makes its own influential achievements. The Institute is the source think tank of China Think Tank Index (CTTI).

PEACE EDUCATION
The Development of Peace Education in Nanjing
In 2001, Department of History, Nanjing University has established formal cooperative relations with Research Center of Peace and Resolution in Coventry University.
In 2003, Courses of peace education were brought into classrooms in universities and citizens’ classrooms in Nanjing.
In 2004, the courses of Peace Studies for undergraduates and post-graduates have been launched and Masters and Doctors for Peace Studies were enrolled in Nanjing University.
Peace Training Classes (co-hosted with renowned foreign institutions of peace)
• 2014.08 Northeast Asia Regional Peacebuilding Institute (NARPI) Peace Studies Summer Training Camp
• 2015.06 “Mekong River Journey of Peace: Youth Public Diplomacy Project” Training Class
• 2015.09 “One Belt & One Road” Reflecting on Peace Practice Training Class
• 2016.11 Reflecting on Peace Practice Training Class
• 2017.07 “Recalling Mass Violence and the Roads to Reconciliation in Asia and Europe” Summer Training Camp
Other Forms of Peace Education
  1. Scholars both at home and abroad have been invited to give nearly 100 lectures in colleges and universities in China.
  2. Peace Studies have been promoted to more than 20 universities in the southeast, northwest, northeast, southwest, and south-central areas of China. Courses of Peace Studies have been established in primary and secondary schools in Nanjing, such as the High School Affiliated to Nanjing Normal University.
  3. Prof. Liu Cheng has published the first textbook of Peace Studies in China and the first series of books of “growth on peace” (three volumes) for primary and secondary schools.

PEACEBUILDING ACTIVITIES
Host of Six International Seminars of Peace Studies
• 2005.03 International Seminar of Confrontation, Conflict and Resolution in the History of Humans (Nanjing • China)
• 2011.05 International Seminar of Religion, Peace and War in the perspective of Peace Studies (Nanjing • China)
• 2012.04 International Seminar of Peace, War and Conflict Resolution in World History (Xi’an • China)
• 2013.01 International Seminar of Asian-Pacific Safety and Conflict Resolution (Harbin • China)
• 2014.04 International Seminar of ―War, Conflict and Non-violent Resolution (Xiangtan • China)
• 2015.04 International Seminar of ―Conflict and Peace Resolution in South China Sea (Nanjing • China)
Host of Two Sino-Japanese Dialogue Sessions of Scholars of Peace Studies
• 2015.10 The Roundtable Conference of “The Past, Present and Future of Sino-Japanese Relationship” (Beijing • China)
• 2017.02 The International Seminar of “The New Vision for Peace in East Asia” (Nanjing • China)
Submission of Two Advisory Reports to the Nanjing Municipal Government
  1. The Advisory Report of Establishing UNESCO Category II Center as International Research and Training Center of Peace Studies
  2. The Advisory Report of Shaping Nanjing into An International City of Peace
Setting up of the first website of peace studies in China http://peacestudiesinchina.com

SINO-FOREIGN COOPERATION
Nanjing University has established cooperative relationships with universities and institutions of Peace Studies in Britain, Japan, Germany, US, South Korea, Australia, Norway, Canada, Netherlands, Poland, India, Austria, Israel, Burma and Cambodia.
Cooperative Universities abroad: Coventry University, George Mason University, University of California, Berkeley, University of San Francisco, University of San Diego, Columbia University, Ritsumeikan University, International Christian University, Meiji Gakuin University, The University of Sydney, University of Vechta, University of Calcutta, Indian Rum Krishna Kalanda Church University, Cambodia Center for Peace and Conflict Studies.
Cooperative Organizations: UNESCO, TRANSCEND International, IPRA (International Peace Research Association), PJSA (Peace and Justice Studies Association), APPRA (Asia-Pacific Peace Research Association), Charhar Institute, NARPI (Northeast Asia Regional Peacebuilding Institute), United Board (United Board for Christian Higher Education in Asia), etc.

PEACE MUSEUMS & EXHIBITIONS
Since 1980s, several museums with historical topics have been established. Some of the famous ones include the Memorial Hall of the Victims in Nanjing Massacre by Japanese Invaders, Nanjing Civil Museum of Anti-Japanese War, the John Rabe and International Safety Zone Memorial Hall, the Museum of the Site of Liji Lane “Comfort Stations” in Nanjing, etc. These museums hold exhibitions of peace culture and war memory throughout the year, which offer cultural support to the construction of Nanjing City as a city of peace.

VISION
To launch international peace dialogue
We are committed to setting up a platform for international exchange on peace and participation of important international activities of peace, to build the image of Nanjing as the city of peace, communicate the information of peace from Nanjing and promote the association of international cities of peace.
To make the best of geographical advantages for Peace
Centered on Nanjing and based on the unique history and culture of Nanjing, we are committed to promoting peace and the construction of cities of peace in China, Northeast Asia and the world.
To set a precedent for similar cities worldwide
As one of the typical martyrdom cities in World War II, the values and culture that Nanjing generates on peace and the voice it makes in the international community, together with the achievements it makes on peace will offer references for the construction of cities of peace for those cities with similar experiences worldwide.

OBJECTIVES
To advance regional peace education and peace research
We take efforts to advance peace education in primary and secondary schools and gradually incorporate peace courses into the course system of basic education in Nanjing. We will select pilot universities to launch courses of peace studies and conduct talents cultivation on peace studies and international student exchange programs, thus to promote the interdisciplinary construction of peace studies in universities. We will carry out peace education activities on National Memorial Day and International Day of Peace, and advance the network building of peace education in schools, communities and society, in order to form the universal peace education in Nanjing.
To launch various peace activities
We will hold art exhibitions and recreational and sports activities on peace to create a good social atmosphere for the construction of the international city of peace. We will hold public lectures for civilians, host international peace forums and organize volunteer activities on peace. We inspire all sectors of the society to participate the construction of the international city of peace in different ways.
To develop and utilize the historical sites of Nanjing City
We will incorporate culture essence and peace elements into the comprehensive landscape arrangement of Nanjing as a city of peace. We take efforts to protect the historical sites, and plan to develop characteristic tourist routes on peace. We will also develop local cultural and creative products of peace, to promote the interdisciplinary combination of excellent cultural products and tourism.
To build peace museums
We lay emphasis on the functional construction of peace museums, and form partnership with peace museums and peace memorial halls in other countries of the world. Based on the normalized communication and cooperation, we jointly plan and hold exhibitions on peace.
To establish and improve the long-term mechanism of construction of city of peace
We take efforts to incorporate the construction of Nanjing city as an international city of peace into the overall planning of social development of the municipal government. We are committed to setting up a sound interactive mechanism among the municipal government, universities, corporations, think tanks and NGOs, to create the synergistic effect.
LETTER OF INTENT



ABOUT THE LEADERS
Liu Cheng, born in 1964, is Professor for History, Director of Institute for Peace Studies, in School of History, Nanjing University. He holds concurrent posts as vice president of Society of World History of Jiangsu Province, member of China British History Association, vice director of The Center for Collaborative Innovation in the South China Sea, director of Peace Studies Center in The Institute of Nanjing Massacre History & International Peace, senior researcher of The Charhar Institute, vice president of Peace Culture Research Association of Hunan Province, member of the executive committee of Northeast Asia Regional Peacebuilding Institute, member of Asia-Pacific Peace Research Association, member of China in Transcend International.
Dr. Liu is Chair holder of UNESCO Chair on Peace Studies
Mr. Liu is one of the leading figures of science and technology supported by “333 High-level Talents Training Project” of Jiangsu Provincial Government (2007), and is supported by “New Century Talent Support Program” of Ministry of Education. Until now he has published 10 books, 4 Chinese translation books, more than 70 papers and edited two series of books.

Zhang Jianjun, born in 1968, is the curator of the Memorial Hall of the Victims in Nanjing Massacre by Japanese Invaders, the executive director of Institute of Nanjing Massacre History & International Peace and the chief editor of the academic journal Japanese Invasion of China History Research, and popular journal on history Purple Grass
Mr. Zhang has edited and compiled the books such as Media Operation of Nanjing Youth Olympic GamesCogent Evidence: Documents of the Nanjing Massacre, and Nanjing Will Not Forget. Some of his articles were published in newspapers like People’s DailyGuangming Daily, and magazines like General PublicDecision-making, etc. He also planned the exhibition of “Common Witness: the Nanjing Massacre” with the focus of historical facts in France and other countries. In addition, he worked on the designing work of the flow of National Memorial Ceremony for the Victims in Nanjing Massacre and some other related thematic education activities, and he has been dedicated to the internationalization and popularization of the history of Nanjing Massacre.


CONTACT INFORMATION
Person to contact: Liu Cheng
Address: School of History, Nanjing University, No.163 Xianlin Avenue, Nanjing City, Jiangsu Province, 210023, P.R.China
Official website of Peace Studies in China: www.peacestudiesinchina.com
Microblog: The Memorial Hall of the Victims in Nanjing Massacre by Japanese Invaders
WeChat: Peace Thinktank




ABOUT NANJING, CHINA (from Wikipedia)

Nanjing, formerly romanized as Nanking and Nankin, is a city situated in the heartland of the lower Yangtze River region in China, which has long been a major centre of culture, education, research, politics, economy, transport networks and tourism. It is the capital city of Jiangsu province of People’s Republic of China and the second largest city in the east China region, with acreage about 6600 square kilometers and a total population of 8,230,000. The inner area of Nanjing enclosed by the city wall is Nanjing City (南京城), with acreage of 55 km2, while Nanjing Metropolitan Region includes surrounding cities and areas, with acreage over 60 thousand km2 and population over 30 million.
Nanjing has a prominent place in Chinese history and culture, having served as the capital of various Chinese dynasties, kingdoms and republican governments dating from the 3rd century CE to 1949. The city has a number of other names, and some historical names are now used as names of districts of the city; among them there is the name Jiangning or Kiangning (江寧, literally “Yangtze’s Peace”), whose former character Jiang (江, River) is the former part of the name Jiangsu and latter character Ning (寧, simplified form 宁, Peace) is the short name of Nanjing. When it was the capital of a state, for instance during the ROC, Jing (京) was adopted as the abbreviation of Nanjing. It first became a Chinese national capital as early as the Jin dynasty, and the name Nanjing was officially designated for the city during the Ming dynasty, about a thousand years later. Nanjing is particularly known as Jinling or Ginling (金陵, literally “Gold Mausoleum”) and the old name has been used since the Warring States period in the Zhou Dynasty.
Located in Yangtze River Delta area and the center of east China, Nanjing is home to one of the world’s largest inland ports. The city is also one of the fifteen sub-provincial cities in the People’s Republic of China’s administrative structure, enjoying jurisdictional and economic autonomy only slightly less than that of a province. Nanjing has been ranked seventh in the evaluation of “Cities with Strongest Comprehensive Strength” issued by the National Statistics Bureau, and second in the evaluation of cities with most sustainable development potential in the Yangtze River Delta. It has also been awarded the title of 2008 Habitat Scroll of Honour of China, Special UN Habitat Scroll of Honour Award and National Civilized City. Nanjing boasts many high-quality universities and research institutes, with the number of universities listed in 100 National Key Universities ranking third, including Nanjing University and Southeast University. The ratio of college students to total population ranks No.1 among large cities nationwide. Nanjing is one of the top three Chinese scientific research centers, especially in the chemical sciences, according to the Nature Index.
Nanjing, one of the nation’s most important cities for over a thousand years, is recognized as one of the Four Great Ancient Capitals of China. It has been one of the world’s largest cities, enjoying peace and prosperity despite wars and disasters. Nanjing served as the capital of Eastern Wu, one of the three major states in the Three Kingdoms period (211–280); the Eastern Jin and each of the Southern Dynasties (Liu Song, Southern Qi, Liang and Chen), which successively ruled southern China from 317–589; the Southern Tang, one of the Ten Kingdoms (937–76); the Ming dynasty when, for the first time, all of China was ruled from the city (1368–1421);[18] and the Republic of China (1927–37, 1945–49) prior to its flight to Taiwan during the Chinese Civil War.[19] The city also served as the seat of the rebel Taiping Heavenly Kingdom (1851–64) and the Japanese puppet regime of Wang Jingwei (1940–45) during the Second Sino-Japanese War. It suffered appalling atrocities in both conflicts, including the Nanjing Massacre.
Nanjing has served as the capital city of Jiangsu province since the establishment of the People’s Republic of China. It boasts many important heritage sites, including the Presidential Palace and Sun Yat-sen Mausoleum. Nanjing is famous for human historical landscapes, mountains and waters such as Fuzimiao, Ming Palace, Chaotian Palace, Porcelain Tower, Drum Tower, Stone City, City Wall, Qinhuai River, Xuanwu Lake and Purple Mountain. Key cultural facilities include Nanjing Library, Nanjing Museum and Art Museum.
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평화 연구-평화 학습-평화 뉴스-중국 평화 연구



평화 연구-평화 학습-평화 뉴스-중국 평화 연구



평화 연구-평화 학습




Liu Cheng, Nanjing, Jiangsu, UNESCO Peace 의장, Nanjing University의 평화 연구소 소장 및 교수.

창시에서 Liu 교수의 강의는 서두르지 만 평화 연구에 대한 Liu 교수의 열정을 줄이지 않았습니다. 수업에서 유머러스하고 재밌어요!

Liu 교수는 2001-2010 년“어린이를위한 평화와 비폭력의 문화”라는 세계의 어린이 발달 회의에 참석 한 학생들과 대화를 나. 다. 회의 제목에서 회의를 다른 단어로 바꿀 수 있습니다. 이것은 당시 유엔 (UN)의 생각이기도했다. 분위기가 점점 더 활발 해지고 있습니다! 그러나이 문서는 중국의 대부분의 사람들에게 알려져 있지 않지만 우리 세대의 어린이들의 성장입니다. 지난 20 년 동안 우리가 누릴 수있는 많은 권리가 당연한 것으로 여겨지지만, 그 결과 사람들의 소원과 추구가 얼마나되는지 모르겠습니다.

Liu 교수는 Liu 교수가 말한 것처럼 "문화 (Culture)"라는 두 번째 질문을 던진다. "일군의 사람들은 비슷한 생각과 행동을 가지고있다." 그런 다음 그러한 환경을 조성하는 데 필요한 것, 그리고 리우 교수의 이해하기 쉬운 삶의 예는 더 깊고 더 깊어 학생들이 생각하게 만듭니다! 모든 사람이 자유, 평등 및 억압을 억누르기를 원하는 것처럼, 자녀가 자녀를 교육 할 때 성장할 수있는 방법은 여러 가지가 있습니다. 콩을 섭취하면 폭력으로 교육을 받으면 대대로 전염됩니다. Liu 교수는 평화의 토양, 즉 환경과 평화로운 길을 설명해야하는데이 평화로운 길에는 "비폭력"이 무엇입니까? 평화가 과정이자 목적이라면 어떤 식 으로든 평화와 갈등이 절대적인 것은 아니라고 생각합니다. 갈등을 제거 할 수 없기 때문에 당사자 A와 당사자 B가 얻을 수있는 공존은 무엇입니까? Liu 교수는 "초월"을 제안했으며 초월은 또한 변화이다. Tao Te Ching의 변증법이 좋거나 나쁘면 갈등 평화도 마찬가지입니다. 대부분의 충돌은 다르고 특별은 다르거 나 차이가 있음을 나타내므로 충돌에 사용해서는 안됩니다. "충돌 행동은 나쁘지 않지만 문제를 해결할 수있는 좋은 방법과 나쁜 방법이 있습니다."

나중에 Liu 교수는 문제를 평화롭게 해결하는 방법을 분석하고 수동적이고 수동적이 아닌-건설적인 방식으로 문제를 해결하고 "승리"타협 초월 (변형)을 달성하기위한 세 가지 방법을 다이어그램에 설명했습니다. 갈등을 해결하거나 제거 할 수 없으므로 변형 만 가능합니다. "초월"은 어떤 종류의 이해입니까? 평화의 길은 이해에서 초월에 이르기까지 간다. 결국 비슷한 협력을 찾고 특별한 것을 발견한다. 다변화와 세계화의 세계 공동체 사회에서와 같이 "모든 것이 다르지만"총 "미국과 미국, 미국과 미국". "초월"은 일종의 이해와 패러다임이라는 것을 알 수 있습니다!

그런 다음 평화로운 길에 도달하는 과정을 분석하겠습니다.깊이 영향을 미치는 두 개의 아이콘이 표시됩니다. 평화 삼각형 : 공감-창의성-비폭력. 세 요소를 직관적으로 표현하고 안정화시킵니다. 그리고 평화에 대한 단계별 접근법은 이해에서 초월에 이르기까지 보여 주며, 결국 유사한 협력을 찾고 특별한 것을 발견합니다.

평화 연구에는 많은 학문이 수반되므로 널리 사용되며 독립적 인 역사나 국제 관계의 역사가 아닙니다. 일반적으로 평화 연구는 평화에 의해 인도되며 비폭력 갈등의 이론적 패러다임과 실제적인 방법을 탐구합니다. 그것은 엄격한 학문적 이슈이자 세계 평화를 유지하기위한 패러다임 일 수 있습니다.

시민 평화 연구, 평화 교육 및 평화 활동은 모든 구석에서 대중화되어야하며, 이는 평화 세력이 평화를 달성 할 수있는 수단입니다. 우리는“평화의 한 조각”입니다.

마지막으로 질문 세션 동안 학생들은 적극적으로 상호 작용했으며 Liu 교수는 풍부한 데이터를 기반으로 한 경험적 연구, 현실을 기반으로 한 비판적 연구 및 건축 연구의 특정 패러다임이라는 세 가지 주요 범주의 학술 연구가 있다고 말했다.

이를 위해 평화 연구는 Liu 교수는 자신의 능력으로이 시대를 위해 무언가를하기를 희망하고 있으며, 앞으로도 매우 중요 할 것입니다.





뉴스 인용 : https://r.xiumi.us/board/v5/3vZ6S/146144754